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Currently, if you configure gdb with explicit --enable-threading, but
then configure detects std::thread does not work, configure silently
disables threading support and continues configuring.
This patch makes that scenario cause a configuration error, like so:
$ /home/pedro/gdb/src/configure --enable-threading && make
...
configure: error: std::thread does not work; disable threading
make[1]: *** [Makefile:11225: configure-gdbsupport] Error 1
make[1]: Leaving directory '/home/pedro/gdb/build-windows-threads'
make: *** [Makefile:1041: all] Error 2
$
Additionally, if you don't explicitly pass --enable-threading, and
std::thread does not work, we will now get a warning (and the build
continues):
$ /home/pedro/gdb/src/configure && make
...
configure: WARNING: std::thread does not work; disabling threading
...
This is similar to how we handle --enable-tui and missing curses. The
code and error/warning messages were borrowed from there.
Change-Id: I73a8b580d1e2a796b23136920c0e181408ae1b22
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Convert the have_ptrace_getregset global within gdbserver to a
tribool. This brings the flag into alignment with the corresponding
flag in GDB.
The gdbserver have_ptrace_getregset variable is already used as a
tribool, it just doesn't have the tribool type.
In a future commit I plan to share more code between GDB and
gdbserver, and having this variable be the same type in both code
bases will make the sharing much easier.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-By: Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
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Spotted some declarations in gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.cc that are no
longer needed. These are:
1. 'init_registers_amd64_linux' - the comment claims this function
is auto generated, but I don't believe that this is still the case.
Also the function is not used in this file,
2. 'tdesc_amd64_linux' - this variable doesn't seem to exist any
more, I suspect this was renamed to 'tdesc_amd64_linux_no_xml', but
neither are used in this file, so lets remove the declaration.
The amd64 in-process-agent still builds fine after this commit.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
Approved-By: Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
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With a x86_64-pc-mingw32 toolchain there is a build issue
whether or not the --disable-threading option is used.
The problem happens because _WIN32_WINNT is defined to 0x501
before #include <mutex> which makes the compilation abort
due to missing support for __gthread_cond_t in std_mutex.h,
which is conditional on _WIN32_WINNT >= 0x600.
Fix the case when --disable-threading is used, by only
including <mutex> in gdb/complaints.c when STD_CXX_THREAD
is defined.
Additionally make the configure script try to #include <mutex>
to automatically select --disable-threading when the header file
is not able to compile.
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Commit 0ee25f97d21e ("Fix regression on aarch64-linux gdbserver")
removed the last use of i in gdbserver/linux-aarch64-low.cc
(aarch64_target::low_stopped_data_address). Breaking the build on
aarch64 with:
gdbserver/linux-aarch64-low.cc: In member function ?virtual CORE_ADDR aarch64_target::low_stopped_data_address()?:
gdbserver/linux-aarch64-low.cc:557:12: error: unused variable ?i? [-Werror=unused-variable]
557 | int pid, i;
| ^
cc1plus: all warnings being treated as errors
Fix this by removing the variable i completely.
Fixes: 0ee25f97d21e ("Fix regression on aarch64-linux gdbserver")
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Commit 9a03f218 ("Fix gdb.base/watchpoint-unaligned.exp on aarch64")
fixed a watchpoint bug in gdb -- but did not touch the corresponding
code in gdbserver.
This patch moves the gdb code into gdb/nat, so that it can be shared
with gdbserver, and then changes gdbserver to use it, fixing the bug.
This is yet another case where having a single back end would prevent
bugs.
I tested this using the AdaCore internal gdb testsuite.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29423
Approved-By: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
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handle_v_attach calls attach_inferior, which says:
"return -1 if attaching is unsupported, 0 if it succeeded, and call
error() otherwise."
So if attach_inferior return != 0, we have the unsupported case,
meaning we should return the empty packet instead of an error.
In practice, this shouldn't trigger, as vAttach support is supposed to
be reported via qSupported. But it doesn't hurt to be pedantic here.
Change-Id: I99cce6fa678f2370571e6bca0657451300956127
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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This fixes the same issue as the previous patch, but for "attach"
instead of "run".
If attaching to a process with "attach" (vAttach packet) fails,
GDBserver throws an error that escapes all the way to the top level.
When an error escapes all the way like that, GDBserver interprets it
as a disconnection, and either goes back to waiting for a new GDB
connection, or exits, if --once was specified.
Here's an example:
On the GDB side:
...
(gdb) tar extended-remote :9999
...
Remote debugging using :9999
(gdb) attach 1
Attaching to process 1
Attaching to process 1 failed
(gdb)
On the GDBserver side:
$ gdbserver --once --multi :9999
Listening on port 9999
Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1, port 37464
gdbserver: Cannot attach to process 1: Operation not permitted (1)
$ # gdbserver exited
This is wrong, as we've connected with extended-remote/--multi.
GDBserver should just report an error to vAttach, and continue
connected to GDB, waiting for other commands.
This commit fixes GDBserver by catching the error locally in
handle_v_attach.
Note we now let pid == 0 pass down to attach_inferior. That is so we
get a useful textual error message to report to GDB.
This fixes a couple KFAILs in gdb.base/attach.exp. Still, I thought
it would be useful to add a new testcase specifically for this
scenario, in case gdb.base/attach.exp is ever split and stops trying
to attach again after a failed attach, with the same GDB session.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19558
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=31554
Change-Id: I25314c7e5f1435eff69cb84d57ecac13d8de3393
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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If starting the inferior process with "run" (vRun packet) fails,
GDBserver throws an error that escapes all the way to the top level.
When an error escapes all the way like that, GDBserver interprets it
as a disconnection, and either goes back to waiting for a new GDB
connection, or exits, if --once was specified.
E.g., with the testcase program added by this commit, we see:
On GDB side:
...
(gdb) tar extended-remote :999
...
Remote debugging using :9999
(gdb) r
Starting program:
Running ".../gdb.base/run-fail-twice/run-fail-twice.nox" on the remote target failed
(gdb)
On GDBserver side:
$ gdbserver --once --multi :9999
Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1, port 34344
bash: line 1: .../gdb.base/run-fail-twice/run-fail-twice.nox: Permission denied
bash: line 1: exec: .../gdb.base/run-fail-twice/run-fail-twice.nox: cannot execute: Permission denied
gdbserver: During startup program exited with code 126.
$ # gdbserver exited
This is wrong, as we've connected with extended-remote/--multi.
GDBserver should just report an error to vCont, and continue connected
to GDB, waiting for other commands.
This commit fixes GDBserver by catching the error locally in
handle_v_run.
Change-Id: Ib386f267522603f554b52a885b15229c9639e870
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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There is no reason the callers of these functions need to change the
returned string, so change the `char *` return types to `const char *`.
Update a few callers to also use `const char *`.
Change-Id: I94adff574d5e1b326e8cc688cf1817a15b408b96
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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It's been over 9 years (since commit faf09f0119da) since Linux GDB and
GDBserver started relying on SIGTRAP si_code to tell whether a
breakpoint triggered, which is important for non-stop mode. When that
then-new code was added, I had left the then-old code as fallback, in
case some architectured still needed it. Given AFAIK there haven't
been complaints since, this commit finally removes the fallback code,
along with USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO.
Change-Id: I140a5333a9fe70e90dbd186aca1f081549b2e63d
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When building with clang 18, I see:
CXX aarch64-linux-tdep.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/aarch64-linux-tdep.c:1299:26: error: variable length arrays in C++ are a Clang extension [-Werror,-Wvla-cxx-extension]
1299 | gdb_byte za_zeroed[za_bytes];
| ^~~~~~~~
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/aarch64-linux-tdep.c:1299:26: note: read of non-const variable 'za_bytes' is not allowed in a constant expression
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/aarch64-linux-tdep.c:1282:10: note: declared here
1282 | size_t za_bytes = std::pow (sve_vl_from_vg (svg), 2);
| ^
Since we are using VLAs right now, that warning doesn't make sense for
us. add `-Wno-vla-cxx-extension` to the list of warning flags we try to
enable. If we ever choose to disallow VLAs, we can remove that flag.
Change-Id: Ie41feafc50c343f6e75333d4f836ce32fbeb6d8c
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For some reason install-dvi is missing although other targets of the
same family are present. This looks like an oversight.
This enables calling 'make install-dvi' from the top-level build
directory.
Fix what looks like another oversight: include 'pdf' in 'all-doc' in
gdb/doc/Makefile.in.
Approved-By: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Tested-By: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
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Now that defs.h, server.h and common-defs.h are included via the
`-include` option, it is no longer necessary for source files to include
them. Remove all the inclusions of these files I could find. Update
the generation scripts where relevant.
Change-Id: Ia026cff269c1b7ae7386dd3619bc9bb6a5332837
Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
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The motivation for this change is for analysis tools and IDEs to be
better at analyzing header files on their own.
There are some definitions and includes we want to occur at the very
beginning of all translation units. The way we currently do that is by
requiring all source files (.c and .cc files) to include one of defs.h
(for gdb), server.h (for gdbserver) of common-defs.h (for gdbsupport and
shared source files). These special header files define and include
everything that needs to be included at the very beginning. Other
header files are written in a way that assume that these special
"prologue" header files have already been included.
My problem with that is that my editor (clangd-based) provides a very
bad experience when editing header files. Since clangd doesn't know
that one of defs.h/server.h/common-defs.h was included already, a lot of
things are flagged as errors. For instance, CORE_ADDR is not known.
It's possible to edit the files in this state, but a lot of the power of
the editor is unavailable.
My proposal to help with this is to include those things we always want
to be there using the compilers' `-include` option. Tom Tromey said
that the current approach might exist because not all compilers used to
have an option like this. But I believe that it's safe to assume they
do today.
With this change, clangd picks up the -include option from the compile
command, and is able to analyze the header file correctly, as it sees
all that stuff included or defined by that -include option. That works
because when editing a header file, clangd tries to get the compilation
flags from a source file that includes said header file.
This change is a bit self-serving, because it addresses one of my
frustrations when editing header files, but it might help others too.
I'd be curious to know if others encounter the same kinds of problems
when editing header files. Also, even if the change is not necessary by
any means, I think the solution of using -include for stuff we always
want to be there is more elegant than the current solution.
Even with this -include flag, many header files currently don't include
what they use, but rather depend on files included before them. This
will still cause errors when editing them, but it should be easily
fixable by adding the appropriate include. There's no rush to do so, as
long as the code still compiles, it's just a convenience thing.
The changes are:
- Add the appropriate `-include` option to the various Makefiles.
- There is one particularity for gdbserver's Makefile: we do not want
to include server.h when building `gdbreplay.o`, as `gdbreplay.cc`
doesn't include it. So we can't simply put the `-include` in
`INTERNAL_CFLAGS`. Add the `-include server.h` option to the
`COMPILE` and `IPAGENT_COMPILE` variables, and added a special rule
to compile `gdbreplay.o` with `-include gdbsupport/common-defs.h`.
- Remove the `-include` option from the `check-headers` rule in
gdb/Makefile.in, since it is already included in `INTERNAL_CFLAGS`.
Change-Id: If3e345d00a9fc42336322f1d8286687d22134340
Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
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Remove `INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE` and `INTERNAL_WARN_CFLAGS`, inline their
contents in `INTERNAL_CFLAGS`. Not functional changes expected.
Change-Id: I6a09794835ca2cfd4a88a3e9f2e627c8f5bd569f
Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
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Reformat some variables definitions. I think it makes them easier to
read, and it also makes diffs clearer.
Change-Id: I82f63ba0e6d0fe268eb1f1ad5ab22c3cd016ab02
Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
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This reverts commit 5920765d7513aaae9241a1850d62d73e0477f81c.
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This reverts commit 0a7bb97ad2f2fe2d18a442dad265051e34eab13e.
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This reverts commit 7816b81e9b36ea0f57662bfd7446b573bf0c9e54.
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This reverts commit cd9b374ffe372dcaf7e4c15548cf53a301d8dcdd.
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This reverts commit 61bb321605fc74703adc994fd7a78e9d2495ca7a.
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This reverts commit 198ff6ff819c240545f9fc68b39636fd376d4ba9.
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This reverts commit c7c9820071f8b81a64221f5cfafb3cbfeafe7916.
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When building with Clang, I get:
CXX nat/x86-linux-tdesc-ipa.o
clang++: error: treating 'c' input as 'c++' when in C++ mode, this behavior is deprecated [-Werror,-Wdeprecated]
Fix that by adding the missing `-x c++` in the rule building
`gdb/nat/*.c` files for the in-process agent.
Change-Id: Ie53e4b9a8b57bef9669397fdfaf21617107c7180
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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This commit builds on the previous series of commits to share the
target description caching code between GDB and gdbserver for
x86/Linux targets.
The objective of this commit is to move the four functions (2 each of)
i386_linux_read_description and amd64_linux_read_description into
gdb/nat/x86-linux-tdesc.c and combine them so we have just a single
copy of each. Then both GDB and gdbserver will link against these
shared functions.
It is worth reading the description of the previous commit to see why
this merging is not as simple as it seems: on the gdbserver side we
actually have two users of these functions, gdbserver itself, and the
in process agent (IPA).
However, the previous commit streamlined the gdbserver code, and so
now it is simple to move the two functions along with all their
support functions from the gdbserver directory into the gdb/nat/
directory, and then GDB is fine to call these functions.
One small curiosity with this patch is the function
x86_linux_post_init_tdesc. On the gdbserver side the two functions
amd64_linux_read_description and i386_linux_read_description have some
functionality that is not present on the GDB side, that is some
additional configuration that is performed as each target description
is created to setup the expedited registers.
To support this I've added the function x86_linux_post_init_tdesc.
This function is called from the two *_linux_read_description
functions, but is implemented separately for GDB and gdbserver.
This does mean adding back some non-shared code when this whole series
has been about sharing code, but now the only non-shared bit is the
single line that is actually different between GDB and gdbserver, all
the rest, which is identical, is now shared.
I did need to add a new rule to the gdbserver Makefile, this is to
allow the nat/x86-linux-tdesc.c file to be compiled for the IPA.
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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This commit is part of a series which aims to share more of the target
description creation between GDB and gdbserver for x86/Linux.
After some refactoring, the previous commit actually started to share
some code, we added the shared x86_linux_tdesc_for_tid function into
nat/x86-linux-tdesc.c. However, this function still relies on
amd64_linux_read_description and i386_linux_read_description which are
implemented separately for both gdbserver and GDB. Given that at
their core, all these functions to is:
1. take an xcr0 value as input,
2. mask out some feature bits,
3. look for a cached pre-generated target description and return it
if found,
4. if no cached target description is found then call either
amd64_create_target_description or
i386_create_target_description to create a new target
description, which is then added to the cache. Return the newly
created target description.
The inner functions amd64_create_target_description and
i386_create_target_description are already shared between GDB and
gdbserver (in the gdb/arch/ directory), so the only thing that
the *_read_description functions really do is add the caching layer,
and it feels like this really could be shared.
However, we have a small problem.
On the GDB side we create target descriptions using a different set of
cpu features than on the gdbserver side! This means that for the
exact same target, we might get a different target description when
using native GDB vs using gdbserver. This surely feels like a
mistake, I would expect to get the same target description on each.
The table below shows the number of possible different target
descriptions that we can create on the GDB side vs on the gdbserver
side for each target type:
| GDB | gdbserver
------|-----|----------
i386 | 64 | 7
amd64 | 32 | 7
x32 | 16 | 7
So in theory, all I want to do is move the GDB version
of *_read_description into the nat/ directory and have gdbserver use
that, then both GDB and gdbserver would be able to create any of the
possible target descriptions.
Unfortunately it's a little more complex than that due to the in
process agent (IPA).
When the IPA is in use, gdbserver sends a target description index to
the IPA, and the IPA uses this to find the correct target description
to use.
** START OF AN ASIDE **
Back in the day I suspect this approach made perfect sense. However
since this commit:
commit a8806230241d201f808d856eaae4d44088117b0c
Date: Thu Dec 7 17:07:01 2017 +0000
Initialize target description early in IPA
I think passing the index is now more trouble than its worth.
We used to pass the index, and then use that index to lookup which
target description to instantiate and use. However, the above commit
fixed an issue where we can't call malloc() within (certain parts of)
the IPA (apparently), so instead we now pre-compute _every_ possible
target description within the IPA. The index is now only used to
lookup which of the (many) pre-computed target descriptions to use.
It would (I think) have been easier all around if the IPA just
self-inspected, figured out its own xcr0 value, and used that to
create the one target description that is required. So long as the
xcr0 to target description code is shared (at compile time) with
gdbserver, then we can be sure that the IPA will derive the same
target description as gdbserver, and we would avoid all this index
passing business, which has made this commit so very, very painful.
** END OF AN ASIDE **
Currently then for x86/linux, gdbserver sends a number between 0 and 7
to the IPA, and the IPA uses this to create a target description.
However, I am proposing that gdbserver should now create one of (up
to) 64 different target descriptions for i386, so this 0 to 7 index
isn't going to be good enough any more (amd64 and x32 have slightly
fewer possible target descriptions, but still more than 8, so the
problem is the same).
For a while I wondered if I was going to have to try and find some
backward compatible solution for this mess. But after seeing how
lightly the IPA is actually documented, I wonder if it is not the case
that there is a tight coupling between a version of gdbserver and a
version of the IPA? At least I'm hoping so.
In this commit I have thrown out the old IPA target description index
numbering scheme, and switched to a completely new numbering scheme.
Instead of the index that is passed being arbitrary, the index is
instead calculated from the set of cpu features that are present on
the target. Within the IPA we can then reverse this logic to recreate
the xcr0 value based on the index, and from the xcr0 value we can
create the correct target description.
With the gdbserver to IPA numbering scheme issue resolved I have then
update the gdbserver versions of amd64_linux_read_description and
i386_linux_read_description so that they create target descriptions
using the same set of cpu features as GDB itself.
After this gdbserver should now always come up with the same target
description as GDB does on any x86/Linux target.
This commit does not introduce any new code sharing between GDB and
gdbserver as previous commits in this series does. Instead this
commit is all about bringing GDB and gdbserver into alignment
functionally so that the next commit can merge the GDB and gdbserver
versions of these functions.
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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This commit is part of a series to share more of the x86 target
description creation code between GDB and gdbserver.
Unlike previous commits which were mostly refactoring, this commit is
the first that makes a real change, though that change should mostly
be for gdbserver; I've largely adopted the "GDB" way of doing things
for gdbserver, and this fixes a real gdbserver bug.
On a x86-64 Linux target, running the test:
gdb.server/connect-with-no-symbol-file.exp
results in two core files being created. Both of these core files are
from the inferior process, created after gdbserver has detached.
In this test a gdbserver process is started and then, after gdbserver
has started, but before GDB attaches, we either delete the inferior
executable, or change its permissions so it can't be read. Only after
doing this do we attempt to connect with GDB.
As GDB connects to gdbserver, gdbserver attempts to figure out the
target description so that it can send the description to GDB, this
involves a call to x86_linux_read_description.
In x86_linux_read_description one of the first things we do is try to
figure out if the process is 32-bit or 64-bit. To do this we look up
the executable via the thread-id, and then attempt to read the
architecture size from the executable. This isn't going to work if
the executable has been deleted, or is no longer readable.
And so, as we can't read the executable, we default to an i386 target
and use an i386 target description.
A consequence of using an i386 target description is that addresses
are assumed to be 32-bits. Here's an example session that shows the
problems this causes. This is run on an x86-64 machine, and the test
binary (xx.x) is a standard 64-bit x86-64 binary:
shell_1$ gdbserver --once localhost :54321 /tmp/xx.x
shell_2$ gdb -q
(gdb) set sysroot
(gdb) shell chmod 000 /tmp/xx.x
(gdb) target remote :54321
Remote debugging using :54321
warning: /tmp/xx.x: Permission denied.
0xf7fd3110 in ?? ()
(gdb) show architecture
The target architecture is set to "auto" (currently "i386").
(gdb) p/x $pc
$1 = 0xf7fd3110
(gdb) info proc mappings
process 2412639
Mapped address spaces:
Start Addr End Addr Size Offset Perms objfile
0x400000 0x401000 0x1000 0x0 r--p /tmp/xx.x
0x401000 0x402000 0x1000 0x1000 r-xp /tmp/xx.x
0x402000 0x403000 0x1000 0x2000 r--p /tmp/xx.x
0x403000 0x405000 0x2000 0x2000 rw-p /tmp/xx.x
0xf7fcb000 0xf7fcf000 0x4000 0x0 r--p [vvar]
0xf7fcf000 0xf7fd1000 0x2000 0x0 r-xp [vdso]
0xf7fd1000 0xf7fd3000 0x2000 0x0 r--p /usr/lib64/ld-2.30.so
0xf7fd3000 0xf7ff3000 0x20000 0x2000 r-xp /usr/lib64/ld-2.30.so
0xf7ff3000 0xf7ffb000 0x8000 0x22000 r--p /usr/lib64/ld-2.30.so
0xf7ffc000 0xf7ffe000 0x2000 0x2a000 rw-p /usr/lib64/ld-2.30.so
0xf7ffe000 0xf7fff000 0x1000 0x0 rw-p
0xfffda000 0xfffff000 0x25000 0x0 rw-p [stack]
0xff600000 0xff601000 0x1000 0x0 r-xp [vsyscall]
(gdb) info inferiors
Num Description Connection Executable
* 1 process 2412639 1 (remote :54321)
(gdb) shell cat /proc/2412639/maps
00400000-00401000 r--p 00000000 fd:03 45907133 /tmp/xx.x
00401000-00402000 r-xp 00001000 fd:03 45907133 /tmp/xx.x
00402000-00403000 r--p 00002000 fd:03 45907133 /tmp/xx.x
00403000-00405000 rw-p 00002000 fd:03 45907133 /tmp/xx.x
7ffff7fcb000-7ffff7fcf000 r--p 00000000 00:00 0 [vvar]
7ffff7fcf000-7ffff7fd1000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0 [vdso]
7ffff7fd1000-7ffff7fd3000 r--p 00000000 fd:00 143904 /usr/lib64/ld-2.30.so
7ffff7fd3000-7ffff7ff3000 r-xp 00002000 fd:00 143904 /usr/lib64/ld-2.30.so
7ffff7ff3000-7ffff7ffb000 r--p 00022000 fd:00 143904 /usr/lib64/ld-2.30.so
7ffff7ffc000-7ffff7ffe000 rw-p 0002a000 fd:00 143904 /usr/lib64/ld-2.30.so
7ffff7ffe000-7ffff7fff000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0
7ffffffda000-7ffffffff000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack]
ffffffffff600000-ffffffffff601000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0 [vsyscall]
(gdb)
Notice the difference between the mappings reported via GDB and those
reported directly from the kernel via /proc/PID/maps, the addresses of
every mapping is clamped to 32-bits for GDB, while the kernel reports
real 64-bit addresses.
Notice also that the $pc value is a 32-bit value. It appears to be
within one of the mappings reported by GDB, but is outside any of the
mappings reported from the kernel.
And this is where the problem arises. When gdbserver detaches from
the inferior we pass the inferior the address from which it should
resume. Due to the 32/64 bit confusion we tell the inferior to resume
from the 32-bit $pc value, which is not within any valid mapping, and
so, as soon as the inferior resumes, it segfaults.
If we look at how GDB (not gdbserver) figures out its target
description then we see an interesting difference. GDB doesn't try to
read the executable. Instead GDB uses ptrace to query the thread's
state, and uses this to figure out the if the thread is 32 or 64 bit.
If we update gdbserver to do it the "GDB" way then the above problem
is resolved, gdbserver now sees the process as 64-bit, and when we
detach from the inferior we give it the correct 64-bit address, and
the inferior no longer segfaults.
Now, I could just update the gdbserver code, but better, I think, to
share one copy of the code between GDB and gdbserver in gdb/nat/.
That is what this commit does.
The cores of x86_linux_read_description from gdbserver and
x86_linux_nat_target::read_description from GDB are moved into a new
file gdb/nat/x86-linux-tdesc.c and combined into a single function
x86_linux_tdesc_for_tid which is called from each location.
This new function does things the GDB way, the only changes are to
allow for the sharing; we now have a callback function to call the
first time that the xcr0 state is read, this allows for GDB and
gdbserver to perform their own initialisation as needed, and
additionally, the new function takes a pointer for where to cache the
xcr0 value, this isn't needed for this commit, but will be useful in a
later commit where gdbserver will want to read this cached xcr0
value.
Another thing to note about this commit is how the functions
i386_linux_read_description and amd64_linux_read_description are
handled. For now I've left these function as implemented separately
in GDB and gdbserver. I've moved the declarations of these functions
into gdb/nat/x86-linux-tdesc.h, but the implementations are left as
separate.
A later commit in this series will make these functions shared too,
but doing this is not trivial, so I've left that for a separate
commit. Merging the declarations as I've done here ensures that
everyone implements the function to the same API, and once these
functions are shared (in a later commit) we'll want a shared
declaration anyway.
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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Share the definition of I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET between GDB and
gdbserver.
This commit is part of a series that aims to share more of the x86
target description creation code between GDB and gdbserver. The
I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET #define is used as part of the target
description creation, and I noticed that this constant is defined
separately for GDB and gdbserver.
This commit moves the definition into gdb/nat/x86-linux.h, which
allows the #define to be shared.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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This commit is part of a series that aims to share more of the x86
target description reading/generation code between GDB and gdbserver.
There are a huge number of similarities between the code in
gdbserver's x86_linux_read_description function and GDB's
x86_linux_nat_target::read_description function, and it is this
similarity that I plan, in a later commit, to share between GDB and
gdbserver.
However, one thing that is different in x86_linux_read_description is
the code inside the '!use_xml' block. This is the code that handles
the case where gdbserver is not allowed to send an XML target
description back to GDB. In this case gdbserver uses some predefined,
fixed, target descriptions.
First, it's worth noting that I suspect this code is not tested any
more. I couldn't find anything in the testsuite that tries to disable
XML target description support. And the idea of having a single
"fixed" target description really doesn't work well when we think
about all the various x86 extensions that exist. Part of me would
like to rip out the no-xml support in gdbserver (at least for x86),
and if a GDB connects that doesn't support XML target descriptions,
gdbserver can just give an error and drop the connection. GDB has
supported XML target descriptions for 16 years now, I think it would
be reasonable for our shipped gdbserver to drop support for the old
way of doing things.
Anyway.... this commit doesn't do that.
What I did notice was that, over time, the '!use_xml' block appears to
have "drifted" within the x86_linux_read_description function; it's
now not the first check we do. Instead we make some ptrace calls and
return a target description generated based on the result of these
ptrace calls. Surely it only makes sense to generate variable target
descriptions if we can send these back to GDB?
So in this commit I propose to move the '!use_xml' block earlier in
the x86_linux_read_description function.
The benefit of this is that this leaves the later half of
x86_linux_read_description much more similar to the GDB function
x86_linux_nat_target::read_description and sets us up for potentially
sharing code between GDB and gdbserver in a later commit.
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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Convert the have_ptrace_getregset global within gdbserver to a
tribool. This brings the flag into alignment with the corresponding
flag in GDB.
The gdbserver have_ptrace_getregset variable is already used as a
tribool, it just doesn't have the tribool type.
In a future commit I plan to share more code between GDB and
gdbserver, and having this variable be the same type in both code
bases will make the sharing much easier.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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Since MPX isn't available for x32, we should clear X86_XSTATE_MPX bits
on x32.
PR server/31511
* linux-x86-low.cc (x86_linux_read_description): Clear
X86_XSTATE_MPX bits in xcr0 on x32.
Reviewed-by: Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
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Make gdbserver's build system locate libiconv when building for Linux.
Commit 07b3255c3bae ("Filter invalid encodings from Linux thread names")
make libiconv madantory for building gdbserver on Linux.
While trying to cross-compile gdb for xtensa-fsf-linux-uclibc (with a
toolchain generated with crosstool-ng), I got:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:48:10: fatal error: iconv.h: No such file or directory
48 | #include <iconv.h>
| ^~~~~~~~~
I downloaded GNU libiconv, built it for that host, and installed it in
an arbitrary directory. I had to modify the gdbserver build system to
locate libiconv and use it, the result is this patch.
I eventually found that crosstool-ng has a config option to make uclibc
provide an implementation of iconv, which is of course much easier. But
given that this patch is now written, I think it would be worth merging
it, it could help some people who do not have iconv built-in their libc
in the future (and may not have the luxury of rebuilding their libc like
I do).
Using AM_ICONV in configure.ac adds these options for configure (the
same we have for gdb):
--with-libiconv-prefix[=DIR] search for libiconv in DIR/include and DIR/lib
--without-libiconv-prefix don't search for libiconv in includedir and libdir
--with-libiconv-type=TYPE type of library to search for (auto/static/shared)
It sets the `LIBICONV` variable with whatever is needed to link with
libiconv, and adds the necessary `-I` flag to `CPPFLAGS`.
To avoid unnecessarily linking against libiconv on hosts that don't need
it, set `MAYBE_LIBICONV` with the contents of `LIBICONV` only if the
host is Linux, and use `MAYBE_LIBICONV` in `Makefile.in`.
Since libiconv is a hard requirement for Linux hosts, error out if it is
not found.
The bits in acinclude.m4 are similar to what we have in
gdb/acinclude.m4.
Update the top-level build system to support building against an in-tree
libiconv (I did not test this part though). Something tells me that the
all-gdbserver dependency on all-libiconv is unnecessary, since there is
already a dependency of configure-gdbserver on all-libiconv (and
all-gdbserver surely depends on configure-gdbserver). I just copied
what's done for GDB though.
ChangeLog:
* Makefile.def: Add configure-gdbserver and all-gdbserver
dependencies on all-libiconv.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
Change-Id: I90f8ef88dd4917df5a68b45550d93622fc9cfed4
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Commit 92d48a1e4eac ("Add an arm-tls feature which includes the tpidruro
register from CP15.") introduced the org.gnu.gdb.arm.tls feature, which
adds the tpidruro register, and unconditionally enabled it in
aarch32_create_target_description.
In Linux, the tpidruro register isn't available via ptrace in the 32-bit
kernel but it is available for an aarch32 program running under an arm64
kernel via the ptrace compat interface. This isn't currently implemented
however, which causes GDB on arm-linux with 64-bit kernel to list the
register but show it as unavailable, as reported by Tom de Vries:
$ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex start -ex 'p $tpidruro'
Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x512
Temporary breakpoint 1, 0xaaaaa512 in main ()
$1 = <unavailable>
Simon Marchi then clarified:
> The only time we should be seeing some "unavailable" registers or memory
> is in the context of tracepoints, for things that are not collected.
> Seeing an unavailable register here is a sign that something is not
> right.
Therefore, disable the TLS feature in aarch32 target descriptions for Linux
and NetBSD targets (the latter also doesn't seem to support accessing
tpidruro either, based on a quick look at arm-netbsd-nat.c).
This patch fixes the following tests:
Running gdb.base/inline-frame-cycle-unwind.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.base/inline-frame-cycle-unwind.exp: cycle at level 3: backtrace when the unwind is broken at frame 3
FAIL: gdb.base/inline-frame-cycle-unwind.exp: cycle at level 5: backtrace when the unwind is broken at frame 5
FAIL: gdb.base/inline-frame-cycle-unwind.exp: cycle at level 1: backtrace when the unwind is broken at frame 1
Tested with Ubuntu 22.04.3 on armv8l-linux-gnueabihf in native,
native-gdbserver and native-extended-gdbserver targets with no regressions.
PR tdep/31418
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=31418
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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The output of "info breakpoints" includes breakpoint, watchpoint,
tracepoint, and catchpoint if they are created, so it should show
all the four types are deleted in the output of "info breakpoints"
to report empty list after "delete breakpoints".
It should also change the output of "delete breakpoints" to make it
clear that watchpoints, tracepoints, and catchpoints are also being
deleted. This is suggested by Guinevere Larsen, thank you.
$ make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/access-mem-running.exp"
$ gdb/gdb gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/access-mem-running/access-mem-running
[...]
(gdb) break main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x12000073c: file /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/access-mem-running.c, line 32.
(gdb) watch global_counter
Hardware watchpoint 2: global_counter
(gdb) trace maybe_stop_here
Tracepoint 3 at 0x12000071c: file /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/access-mem-running.c, line 27.
(gdb) catch fork
Catchpoint 4 (fork)
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y 0x000000012000073c in main at /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/access-mem-running.c:32
2 hw watchpoint keep y global_counter
3 tracepoint keep y 0x000000012000071c in maybe_stop_here at /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/access-mem-running.c:27
not installed on target
4 catchpoint keep y fork
Without this patch:
(gdb) delete breakpoints
Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y
(gdb) info breakpoints
No breakpoints or watchpoints.
(gdb) info breakpoints 3
No breakpoint or watchpoint matching '3'.
With this patch:
(gdb) delete breakpoints
Delete all breakpoints, watchpoints, tracepoints, and catchpoints? (y or n) y
(gdb) info breakpoints
No breakpoints, watchpoints, tracepoints, or catchpoints.
(gdb) info breakpoints 3
No breakpoint, watchpoint, tracepoint, or catchpoint matching '3'.
Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
Approved-by: Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
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Since we now require C++17, and therefore gcc >= 9, it's no longer
useful to have gcc version checks for older gcc version.
Change-Id: I3a87baa03c475f2b847b422b16b69c5ff7215b54
Reviewed-by: Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
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Since commit 393a6b5947d0 ("Thread options & clone events (Linux
GDBserver)"), aarch64-linux gdbserver crashes when the inferior
vforks. This happens in aarch64_get_debug_reg_state:
struct process_info *proc = find_process_pid (pid);
return &proc->priv->arch_private->debug_reg_state;
Here, find_process_pid returns nullptr -- the new inferior hasn't yet
been created in linux_process_target::handle_extended_wait.
This patch fixes the problem by having
linux_process_target::handle_extended_wait create the child process
earlier, before the child LWP is created. This is what the function
did before it was reorganized by the commit referred above.
Change-Id: Ib8b3a2e6048c3ad2b91a92ea4430da507db03c50
Co-Authored-By: Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
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Loongson Binary Translation (LBT) is used to accelerate binary
translation, which contains 4 scratch registers (scr0 to scr3),
x86/ARM eflags (eflags) and x87 fpu stack pointer (ftop). This
patch support gdb to fetch/store these registers.
Signed-off-by: Feiyang Chen <chenfeiyang@loongson.cn> # Framework
Signed-off-by: Binbin Zhou <zhoubinbin@loongson.cn> # Detail Optimizes
Signed-off-by: Hui Li <lihui@loongson.cn> # Error Fixes
Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
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Add LoongArch's vector extensions support, which including
128bit LSX (i.e., Loongson SIMD eXtension) and 256bit LASX
(i.e., Loongson Advanced SIMD eXtension). This patch support
gdb to fetch/store vector registers.
Signed-off-by: Hui Li <lihui@loongson.cn>
Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
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My earlier attempt to mask the segment registers in gdbserver for
Windows introduced some bugs. That patch is here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2023-December/205306.html
The problem turned out to be that these fields in the Windows
'CONTEXT' type are just 16 bits, so while masking the values on read
is fine, writing the truncated values back then causes zeros to be
written to some subsequent field.
This patch cleans this up by arranging never to write too much data to
a field.
I also noticed that two register numbers here were never updated for
the 64-bit port. This patch fixes this as well, and renames the "FCS"
register to follow gdb.
Finally, this patch applies the same treatment to windows-nat.c.
Reviewed-by: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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This commit is the result of the following actions:
- Running gdb/copyright.py to update all of the copyright headers to
include 2024,
- Manually updating a few files the copyright.py script told me to
update, these files had copyright headers embedded within the
file,
- Regenerating gdbsupport/Makefile.in to refresh it's copyright
date,
- Using grep to find other files that still mentioned 2023. If
these files were updated last year from 2022 to 2023 then I've
updated them this year to 2024.
I'm sure I've probably missed some dates. Feel free to fix them up as
you spot them.
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No functional change here, just touch up generated output slightly.
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Only check these decls once in case other m4 macros also look for them.
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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This is used by gdb, gdbsupport, and gdbserver. We want to use it
in the sim tree too. Move it to gdbsupport which is meant as the
common sharing space for these projects.
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Simon pointed out that my earlier patch to gdbserver's thread name
code:
commit 07b3255c3bae7126a0d679f957788560351eb236
Author: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Date: Thu Jul 13 17:28:48 2023 -0600
Filter invalid encodings from Linux thread names
... introduced a regression. This bug was that the iconv output was
not \0-terminated.
Looking at it, I found another bug as well -- replace_non_ascii would
not \0-terminate, and also would return the wrong pointer
This patch fixes both of them.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=31153
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Change most of regcache (and base classes) to use array_view when
possible, instead of raw pointers. By propagating the use of array_view
further, it enables having some runtime checks to make sure the what we
read from or write to regcaches has the expected length (such as the one
in the `copy(array_view, array_view)` function. It also integrates well
when connecting with other APIs already using gdb::array_view.
Add some overloads of the methods using raw pointers to avoid having to
change all call sites at once (which is both a lot of work and risky).
I tried to do this change in small increments, but since many of these
functions use each other, it ended up simpler to do it in one shot than
having a lot of intermediary / transient changes.
This change extends into gdbserver as well, because there is some part
of the regcache interface that is shared.
Changing the reg_buffer_common interface to use array_view caused some
build failures in nat/aarch64-scalable-linux-ptrace.c. That file
currently "takes advantage" of the fact that
reg_buffer_common::{raw_supply,raw_collect} operates on `void *`, which
IMO is dangerous. It uses raw_supply/raw_collect directly on
uint64_t's, which I guess is fine because it is expected that native
code will have the same endianness as the debugged process. To
accomodate that, add some overloads of raw_collect and raw_supply that
work on uint64_t.
This file also uses raw_collect and raw_supply on `char` pointers.
Change it to use `gdb_byte` pointers instead. Add overloads of
raw_collect and raw_supply that work on `gdb_byte *` and make an
array_view on the fly using the register's size. Those call sites could
be converted to use array_view with not much work, in which case these
overloads could be removed, but I didn't want to do it in this patch, to
avoid starting to dig in arch-specific code.
During development, I inadvertently changed reg_buffer::raw_compare's
behavior to not accept an offset equal to the register size. This
behavior (effectively comparing 0 bytes, returning true) change was
caught by the AArch64 SME core tests. Add a selftest to make sure that
this raw_compare behavior is preserved in the future.
Change-Id: I9005f04114543ddff738949e12d85a31855304c2
Reviewed-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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Right now, gdbsupport/common-regcache.h contains two abstractons for a
regcache. An opaque type `regcache` (gdb and gdbserver both have their
own regcache that is the concrete version of this) and an abstract base
class `reg_buffer_common`, that is the base of regcaches on both sides.
These abstractions allow code to be written for both gdb and gdbserver,
for instance in the gdb/arch sub-directory.
However, having two
different abstractions is impractical. If some common code has a regcache,
and wants to use an operation defined on reg_buffer_common, it can't.
It would be better to have just one. Change all instances of `regcache
*` in gdbsupport/common-regcache.h to be `reg_buffer_common *`, then fix
fallouts.
Implementations in gdb and gdbserver now need to down-cast (using
gdb::checked_static_cast) from reg_buffer_common to their concrete
regcache type. Some of them could be avoided by changing free functions
(like regcache_register_size) to be virtual methods on
reg_buffer_common. I tried it, it seems to work, but I did not include
it in this series to avoid adding unnecessary changes.
Change-Id: Ia5503adb6b5509a0f4604bd2a68b4642cc5283fd
Reviewed-by: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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this patch fixes a crash in gdbserver whenever a process is detached.
the crash is caused by `detach` calling `remove_process` before `win32_clear_inferiors`
error message:
Detaching from process 184
../../gdbserver/inferiors.cc:160: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detec
ted.
remove_process: Assertion `find_thread_process (process) == NULL' failed.
This application has requested the Runtime to terminate it in an unusual way.
Please contact the application's support team for more information.
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Building on the last commit, which added a general --debug=COMPONENT
option to the gdbserver command line, this commit updates the monitor
command to allow for general:
(gdb) monitor set debug COMPONENT off|on
style commands. Just like with the previous commit, the COMPONENT can
be any one of all, threads, remote, event-loop, and correspond to the
same set of global debug flags.
While on the command line it is possible to do:
--debug=remote,event-loop,threads
the components have to be entered one at a time with the monitor
command. I guess there's no reason why we couldn't allow component
grouping within the monitor command, but (to me) what I have here
seemed more in the spirit of GDB's existing 'set debug ...' commands.
If people want it then we can always add component grouping later.
Notice in the above that I use 'off' and 'on' instead of '0' and '1',
which is what the 'monitor set debug' command used to use. The 0/1
can still be used, but I now advertise off/on in all the docs and help
text, again, this feels more inline with GDB's existing boolean
settings.
I have removed the two existing monitor commands:
monitor set remote-debug 0|1
monitor set event-loop-debug 0|1
These are replaced by:
monitor set debug remote off|on
monitor set debug event-loop off|on
respectively.
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
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Currently, gdbserver has the following command line options related to
debugging output:
--debug
--remote-debug
--event-loop-debug
This doesn't scale well. If I want an extra debug component I need to
add another command line flag.
This commit changes --debug to take a list of components.
The currently supported components are: all, threads, remote, and
event-loop. The 'threads' component represents the debug we currently
get from the --debug option. And if --debug is used without a
component list then the threads component is assumed as the default.
Currently the threads component actually includes a lot of output that
is not really threads related. In the future I'd like to split this
up into some new, separate components. But that is not part of this
commit, or even this series.
The special component 'all' does what you'd expect: enables debug
output from all supported components.
The component list is parsed left to write, and you can prefix a
component with '-' to disable that component, so I can write:
target> gdbserver --debug=all,-event-loop
to get debug for all components except the event-loop component.
I've removed the existing --remote-debug and --event-loop-debug
command line options, these are equivalent to --debug=remote and
--debug=event-loop respectively, or --debug=remote,event-loop to
enable both components.
In this commit I've only update the command line options, in the next
commit I'll update the monitor commands to support a similar
interface.
Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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